Regardless of whether you think it’s missing out on such classic games like Crash Bandicoot, Spyro the Dragon, or Castlevania: Symphony of the Night, it’s still a relatively solid slate of games for Sony to put on the device. Not to mention, most of those aforementioned titles that many have stated are missing from the console have seemed to have had recent remasters that have come to PS4 already, so their non-inclusion on the PlayStation Classic does make sense from Sony’s perspective.

In case you haven’t seen it already, here’s the full list that we’ll be getting in the west:

Battle Arena Toshinden

Cool Boarders 2

Destruction Derby

Final Fantasy VII

Grand Theft Auto

Intelligent Qube

Jumping Flash

Metal Gear Solid

Mr. Driller

Oddworld: Abe’s Oddysee

Rayman

Resident Evil: Director’s Cut

Revelations: Persona

R4: Ridge Racer Type 4

Super Puzzle Fighter II Turbo

Syphon Filter

Tekken 3

Tom Clancy’s Rainbow Six

Twisted Metal

Wild Arms

What many soon realized after the announcement of the PlayStation Classic lineup over here for us here in North America and Europe is that Japan would be getting a pretty different lineup altogether. While standout titles like Metal Gear Solid and Resident Evil (otherwise known as Biohazard in Japan) would still be present, Japan-only releases like Arc the Lad and Parasite Eve would be hitting the Japanese version of the PlayStation Classic in favor of some others that we’ll be getting.

Here’s the full list of games hitting Japan’s iteration of the PSOne Classic:

Arc the Lad

Arc the Lad 2

Armored Core

Biohazard Director’s Cut (Resident Evil)

Final Fantasy VII

G Darius

Gradius Gaiden

Intelligent Qube

Jumping Flash

Metal Gear Solid

Mr. Driller

Parasite Eve

Revelations: Persona

Ridge Racer Type 4

SaGa Frontier

Super Puzzle Fighter IIX

Tekken 3

Toshinden (Battle Arena Toshinden)

Wild Arms

XI [sái] (Devil Dice)

So I turn to you, DualShockers faithful, and open the floor up to your thoughts — which of these versions of the PlayStation Classic is better? Do you prefer the one we’ll be getting here in NA and EU or is the Japanese lineup superior?

Or, maybe you’re like me and prefer option #3, which would be to just download most of these old games as PS1 Classics on your PS Vita. This is probably the least-costly option of the three, and hey, you can even take your PS1 games on the go with you. Long live the Vita.

Be sure to let us know down in the comments which version you think has the superior lineup and whether or not you’re still interested in purchasing this thing once it launches on December 3.